Harfleur

Harfleur

French commune
name= Harfleur

region=Haute-Normandie
department=Seine-Maritime
arrondissement=Le Havre
canton= Gonfreville-l'Orcher
insee=76341
cp=76700
maire= François Guégan (PCF)
mandat=2001-2008
intercomm=Communauté d'agglomération Havraise
longitude=0.198888888889
latitude=49.5072222222


alt moy=6 m
alt mini=0 m
alt maxi=89 m
hectares=421
km²=4.21
sans=8602
date-sans=2005
dens=2039|

Harfleur is a commune in the Seine-Maritime "département" of the Haute-Normandie region of northern France.

Geography

A light industrial town situated in the Pays de Caux by the banks of the Seine and Lézarde rivers, some convert|6|mi|km east of Le Havre, at the junction of the N282, D231 and D9015 roads. SNCF railways have a station here.

History

In Roman times, Harfleur was known as "Caracotinum", the principal port of the ancient Calates. A Roman road led from Harfleur to Troyes. Another road that disappeared during the Hundred Years War linked Harfleur to Fécamp).
Several Merovingian sarcophagi have been unearthed at the foot of Mount Cabert.
In the Middle Ages, its name, "Herosfloth", "Harofluet" or "Hareflot", was still sufficiently uncorrupted to indicate its Norman origins. The suffix "fleur" comes from Old Norse "Flöthe" meaning "estuary or arm of the sea" and is related to the word fjord. The precise meaning of the prefix "har" is unknown.
* 1202 saw the granting of a town charter by King John of England.
* In 1281 began the expansion of the port of Harfleur.
* At the beginning of the 14th century, Harfleur saw the setting-up of a Catalan and Portuguese merchants association.
* 1341 - 1361 saw the building of the city walls, pierced by three gates (Porte d’Eure, Porte de Rouen and Montivilliers Gate). These were restored in the 15th century after the destruction of the Hundred Years War. For six centuries, it was the principal seaport of northwestern France. In 1415, it was captured by Henry V of England. In 1435, the people of the district of Caux, led by Jean de Grouchy, rose against the English. 104 of the inhabitants opened the gates of the town to the insurgents, and forced the English occupiers out. The memory of the deed was long perpetuated by the bells of St Martin's tolling 104 strokes.
Between 1445 and 1449 the English were again in possession, but the town was recovered for the French by Dunois in 1450.
In 1562, the Huguenots pillaged Harfleur and its registers and charters perished in the confusion, but its privileges were restored by Charles IX of France in 1568. It was not until 1710 that it was subjected to the "taille."In the 16th century, the port began to dwindle in importance owing to the silting up of the Seine estuary and the rise of Le Havre. In 1887, the Tancarville canal restored waterborne access to the town from both the Seine and Le Havre.

Population

Places of interest

* The church of St-Martin, dating from the 14th century.
* The 17th century Hôtel de Ville (town hall).
* Medieval ramparts (1350-1390)
* The 15th century museums of fishing and of archaeology and history.

Famous people born in Harfleur

* David Auradou, rugby player
* Vikash Dhorasoo, footballer
* Charles N'Zogbia, footballer

See also

*Communes of the Seine-Maritime department
*Seine-Maritime
*Normandy

External links

* [http://www.harfleur.fr/ Official website of Harfleur] fr
* [http://perso.club-internet.fr/glecornu/histoire.htm Harfleur history website] fr
* [http://www.quid.fr/communes.html?mode=detail&id=16530&req=Harfleur Harfleur on the Quid website] fr

Notes

*"This article is based on the original and the equivalent article from the French Wikipedia, consulted on October 2nd 2008."


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Harfleur — Harfleur …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Harfleur — Escudo …   Wikipedia Español

  • Harfleur — (spr. Harflöhr), Stadt im Arrondissement le Hâvre des französischen Departements Seine inférieur, an der Mündung der Lézarde in die Seine; kleiner Hafen, Schifffahrt, Fischerei, Fabrik chemischer Producte, Bleichen, Ölfabrikation,… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Harfleur — (spr. arflör), Stadt im franz. Depart. Niederseine, Arrond. Le Havre, an der Lézarde, nahe an ihrem Ausfluß in das Mündungsbecken der Seine, und an der Westbahn gelegen, hat eine schöne gotische Kirche mit 83 m hohem Turm, ein Schloß im… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Harfleur — (spr. arflöhr), Seestadt im franz. Dep. Seine Inférieure, an der Lézarde, (1901) 2686 E.; einst wichtige Festung …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Harfleur — (–öhr), früher Hareflot, französ. Stadt 1 Ml. von Havre mit 1800 E.; früher bedeutender, wurde es durch Havre überflügelt …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • Harfleur —   [ar flœːr], Stadt im östlichen Vorortbereich von Le Havre, Département Seine Maritime, Frankreich, 9 100 Einwohner; liegt am Seitenkanal des Seine Ästuars; Erdölraffinerien, Metallindustrie.   …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Harfleur — 49° 30′ 26″ N 0° 11′ 56″ E / 49.5072222222, 0.198888888889 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Harfleur — Original name in latin Harfleur Name in other language Arfler, Harfleur, Port de Harfleur, Арфлер State code FR Continent/City Europe/Paris longitude 49.5066 latitude 0.19827 altitude 4 Population 8286 Date 2008 01 05 …   Cities with a population over 1000 database

  • HARFLEUR —    a village in France with a strong fortress, 4 m. S. of Havre, taken by Henry V. in 1415, and retaken afterwards by both French and English, becoming finally French in 1450 …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

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